Medical Billing for Podiatry Practices

Podiatry Billing That Pays What You Earn

Podiatry billing is complicated by Medicare's routine foot care exclusions, the strict criteria for diabetic foot care coverage, and the complex wound care coding required for ulcer debridement. Nail procedures, orthotic billing, and surgical global periods add further complexity that generalist billers routinely mishandle. 360Solutions provides podiatry billing specialists who apply the correct diagnosis-linked service rules, capture wound care revenue, and navigate Medicare's foot care coverage criteria with precision.

34%
avg podiatry claims denied for routine vs. covered care misclassification
$290
avg additional revenue per diabetic wound care visit correctly coded
96%
first-pass claim rate with specialist podiatry billers
Podiatry Billing Challenges
Where practices lose the most revenue:
Routine vs. Covered Foot Care
Diabetic Foot Exam Billing
Wound Care & Debridement Coding
Orthotics & DME Billing
Podiatry Billing Challenges

Where Podiatry Practices Lose Revenue

These are the coding and billing pitfalls that cost podiatry practices the most — and where our specialised billers add the most value.

Routine vs. Covered Foot Care

Medicare excludes routine foot care (nail trimming, callus removal) unless documented systemic conditions like diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, or peripheral neuropathy create medical necessity. Wrong diagnosis linkage causes blanket denial of all foot care claims.

Diabetic Foot Exam Billing

The comprehensive diabetic foot exam is reimbursable once every 6 months under Medicare when proper neuropathy documentation exists. Many practices miss this billable visit entirely or fail to meet documentation requirements.

Wound Care & Debridement Coding

Wound debridement codes (97597-97598 for selective; 97602 for non-selective) are size-dependent and method-dependent. Correct measurement documentation is critical — incorrect size selection or method coding triggers claim denial and audit scrutiny.

Orthotics & DME Billing

Custom orthotics (L3000-L3485) require a prescription, certificate of medical necessity, and documentation of failed conservative treatment. DMEPOS billing rules differ completely from professional claim billing — misrouted claims result in complete non-payment.

Coding Intelligence

High-Risk CPT Groups

Code ranges payers audit most aggressively in Podiatry.

11720–11721
Debridement of nail — single / two or more — mycotic vs. dystrophic
11055–11057
Paring or cutting of benign hyperkeratotic lesion — 1 / 2–4 / 4+ lesions
97597–97598
Selective debridement — first 20 sq cm / each additional 20 sq cm
28285 / 28296
Correction of hammertoe / bunionectomy — with or without osteotomy
G0247 / G0246
Diabetic foot exam — routine / at-risk — Medicare preventive codes
Denial Intelligence

Common Denial Patterns

Knowing these before submission is the difference between a 60% and a 96% first-pass rate.

Routine nail debridement billed without systemic condition diagnosis linkage

Wound debridement size tier does not match documented wound measurement in note

Custom orthotic billed to medical insurance without DMEPOS supplier number

Bunionectomy global period post-op visit billed without new problem documentation

Diabetic foot exam billed more frequently than once per 6-month period

Free Denial Audit

Send us your last 90 days of remittance data — we'll identify your top 3 fixable denial sources at no cost.

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Our Process

How 360Solutions Works for Podiatry Practices

01

Free 2-Week Billing Audit

We review your last 90 days: denial breakdown by category, AR aging by payer, charge lag, collection rate, and any recurring coding issues specific to your specialty. No commitment required.

02

Specialty Coder Assignment

You are paired with a coder trained specifically in podiatry coding. They learn your providers, your documentation patterns, and your payer mix before touching a claim.

03

Parallel Billing Transition

We run alongside your current billing for 10–14 days with zero cash flow disruption. Claims keep moving during the transition. Your account manager provides daily status updates.

04

Live KPI Dashboard

Real-time visibility into billed, paid, denied, AR aging, and collection rate — segmented by provider and payer. No black box, no month-end surprises.

05

Weekly Account Manager Call

Every week your dedicated account manager walks through last week's KPIs, denial trends, and any action items. Critical issues are escalated the same day — not at the next scheduled call.

Podiatry Billing FAQ

Questions From Podiatry Practices

We review every foot care claim against the patient's active diagnoses, confirming the systemic condition (diabetes, PVD, neuropathy) is documented in the visit note and linked correctly on the claim. We maintain a payer-specific matrix of qualifying diagnoses to prevent blanket routine care denials.
Yes. We handle professional claim billing for wound care and coordinate DMEPOS supplier billing for custom orthotics under the practice's DMEPOS accreditation. Each billing pathway follows its own rules — we manage both simultaneously without cross-contamination.
Each wound is measured separately. The first wound uses the primary debridement code sized to the actual wound area, and each additional wound uses the add-on code. We document wound count, size, and debridement method from the visit note before coding each claim.
Yes. We prepare auth requests with the required clinical documentation, imaging results, and conservative treatment failure history for all elective podiatric procedures. We track approvals and alert the practice if a procedure is scheduled without active authorization.
Ready to Fix Your Podiatry Billing?

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No-Obligation Audit

Two weeks, no contract. A certified podiatry billing specialist reviews your claims, denial patterns, and AR — and shows you exactly what is recoverable.